The original chest of the Ark of the Covenant is in Kenya, we can now authoritatively confirm. The chest claimed to contain the ten commandments that God gave to Moses as stipulated in the book of Exodus 25; 6 – 10 have been in Kenya since 1210 AD

In a paid advertisement appearing in THE PEOPLE DAILY, dated November 9, 2007, the Chief Seer’s messenger has explained in detail how the Ark of the Covenant was transported from its original location of King Solomon’s temple in Jerusalem. Solomon had a son by a foreign wife, Prince Menelik 1. At 19 years of age, he went to Saba (Ethiopia) to attend his coronation and with the consent of the Levites he took the Chest with him. After years of temporary placement in Ethiopia, the ark came to rest in Axum.

In Axum, Tunyaga (the people of the cross) or Nguo Ndune (the red suit) had conspired to steal Managi and Ikunjo (The Ark of the Covenant and the Scrolls). This led the current Kabiru (Hebrew) or Gikuyu community to act. In the flight to hide the treasure, the war broke out and they had to fight until Thagana (Tana Island). From the island of Tana, the war entered the Somali coast, the Kaya forests in Kwale along the Kenyan coast. To divert attention, a replica of the Ark was made and smashed to pieces in Digo, still on the Kenyan coast.

But that didn’t help when the war escalated and pushed the Kabiru back towards the mainland. They quickly buried the Managi and the scrolls in secret places on Mount Kenya. The writer goes on to say that the location of the Ark of the Covenant, renamed by scholars as Tripple S, the TSC sanctuary will never be the subject of investigation. However, scrolls that are of equal importance, and which are hidden in sites renamed IKB and IKC, could be responsibly excavated and located.

This revelation is likely to spark renewed interest in the great quest for the Ark of the Covenant. In the article, the writer reveals that Mount Kenya is considered to be God’s Mountain. The sanctuaries found there are run by a college of 12 seers who operate in secret to protect their wisdom. People who pray with their hands raised and facing the mountain will always have their prayers answered by God. That mode of prayer was prophesied by David when he said “the Ethiopians will raise their hands in prayer to God.”

It was adopted as the Gikuyu mode of prayer when the Ark was placed in their custody.

The revelation and events of the coming week, when Gikuyu communities have been called to pray in unison with God, should be of great interest to religious scholars and historians.

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